Academia Sinica fellows elected members of TWAS

Three Academia Sinica academicians from the field of life sciences have been elected to the Academy of Sciences for the Developing World (TWAS) in 2012

TWAS announced the list of new members at its general meeting in Tianjin, China

Singapore: Three Academia Sinica academicians from the field of life sciences have been elected to the Academy of Sciences for the Developing World (TWAS) in 2012. The list of new members was made public on September 18. Two others elected from Academia Sinica, Taiwan, are from the fields of physics and engineering sciences. The announcement of the conferral of the accolades was made at the 23rd TWAS general meeting held from September 17 to 21 in Tianjin, China.

TWAS has more than 1,000 members from 90 countries. The main mission of the academy is to promote scientific excellence and capacity in the South for science-based sustainable development.

The academicians are Mr Kuan Wang, director of Institute of Chemistry, Academia Sinica; Mr Lu-Hai Wang, acting president and distinguished investigator of the Division of Molecular and Genomic Medicine, National Health Research Institutes, Taiwan; Mr Kung-Yee Liang, president of National Yang-Ming University; and Shih-I Chu, Watkins Distinguished Professor of University of Kansas and Director of Kansas Center for Advanced Scientific Computing. Chenming Hu, professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, University of California at Berkeley, was elected an associate fellow.

Mr Kuan Wang was elected to the area of Structural, Cell and Molecular biology. He has made significant contributions to the study of muscle biology and cell motility, including the discovery and naming of five new cytoskeletal proteins that are important in assembly, regulation and dysfunction of the cytomatrix in cardiac, skeletal and smooth muscles and in non-muscle cells.

Mr Lu-Hai Wang was elected to the area of Biological Systems and Organisms. Wang's early work initially established the genomic map of Rous sarcoma virus and demonstrated the cellular origin of the src gene. He discovered novel cancer-causing genes (fps and ros), and elucidated the molecular basis of various cancer-causing mechanisms.